Tech Firms Push to Use TV Airwaves for Internet
Cable, Phone Companies Watch Warily

By Charles Babington
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 13, 2007; D01

A coalition of big technology companies wants to bring high-speed Internet
access to consumers in a new way: over television airwaves. Key to the
project is whether a device scheduled to be delivered to federal labs today
lives up to its promise.

The coalition, which includes Microsoft and Google, wants regulators to
allow idle TV channels, known as white space, to be used to beam the
Internet into homes and offices. But the Federal Communications Commission
first must be convinced that such traffic would not bleed outside its
designated channels and interfere with existing broadcasts.

The six partners -- Microsoft, Google, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Intel and
Philips -- say they can meet that challenge. Today, they plan to give FCC
officials a prototype device, built by Microsoft, that will undergo months
of testing.

If the device passes muster, the coalition says, it could have versions in
stores by early 2009.

Proponents liken the idea to so-called WiFi signals, which provide wireless
Internet access from phone or cable companies to users in airports, coffee
shops and elsewhere.

"These devices have the potential to take the success of the WiFi phenomenon
to another level," said Jonathan S. Adelstein, an FCC commissioner.

Warily watching from the sidelines are the major telephone and cable
companies that compete to bring high-speed Internet into millions of
businesses and homes.

Telecommunications officials and analysts differ on the degree to which
TV-spectrum-based Internet access might seriously threaten existing Internet
providers.

Some said a new Internet provider might force the older companies to drop
prices. Others said the available white-space spectrum might be too limited
to make much of an impact.

Wireless carriers said they were not afraid of new rivals. "The wireless
industry was born in a competitive environment," said Jeffrey Nelson, a
Verizon Wireless spokesman, playing down the risk to his company. AT&T said
in a statement that FCC rules "should protect not only current TV band
incumbents from interference but also those services that will be introduced
into adjacent spectrum" in the future.

Several analysts said a TV-spectrum system might make the most sense in
rural areas, where high-speed Internet access via phone or cable lines is
expensive to deploy. Small companies might build some towers, beam
white-space spectrum to farm homes and cabins, and connect it to an Internet
provider, they said.

In urban areas, a TV Internet system might somehow be combined with phone-
or cable-provided Internet service to redirect signals through every wall of
a house or office -- without replacing the phone or cable company as the
provider, said a person affiliated with the coalition. He spoke on condition
of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record about such
possible uses.

In a document filed with the FCC, the coalition stated: "As the world's
largest producers of consumer electronics, software, semiconductors,
personal computers, and peripheral devices, the Coalition's members stand
ready to commit substantial resources to bring these advancements to
consumers."

Google joined the coalition because the effort could create opportunities to
transmit information over new platforms. It also might strengthen Google's
hand should the traditional Internet pipelines -- big phone and cable
companies -- start charging Internet companies higher prices to move their
content more swiftly to consumers.

"It recognizes that the heart of the problem is a lack of competition on the
broadband platform," said Rick Whitt, Google's telecom and media counsel in
Washington. "We're very interested in finding ways to create platforms for
other broadband connectivity."

Staff writers Sam Diaz and Alan Sipress contributed to this report.

David T. Hughes
Director, Corporate Communications
Roadstar Internet
604 South King Street -Suite 200
Leesburg, VA 20175
-HOME OF INET LOUDOUN-
Office - (703) 234-9969
Direct - (703) 953-1645
Cell -    (703) 587-3282
Corporate Offices - (703) 554-6621
Fax - (703) 258-0003
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AIM: dhughes248 - Video conference capable



-- 
WISPA Wireless List: [email protected]

Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/

Reply via email to